Australia’s housing affordability expected to worsen and homelessness soar under fossil-fuelled future
New research from the University of Sydney indicates that Australia's housing affordability is projected to worsen and homelessness could quadruple by 2036 under a fossil-fuel-dependent future. The study modelled the housing market and found that climate change impacts housing and rental costs under both high and low emission scenarios, with vulnerable households being most affected by a high-emissions path.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedNew research from the University of Sydney indicates that Australia's housing affordability is projected to worsen and homelessness could quadruple by 2036 under a fossil-fuel-dependent future. The study modelled the housing market and found that climate change impacts housing and rental costs under both high and low emission scenarios, with vulnerable households being most affected by a high-emissions path. Researchers suggest that without fairer housing policies and emission reduction efforts, rising rents and increased housing costs relative to incomes will exacerbate homelessness. The findings highlight the unequal impacts of global heating on renters and those experiencing homelessness, emphasizing the need for targeted housing policies and increased social housing investment.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedAny new housing policies need to undergo climate-change simulations to make sure they don’t deepen inequality.
Climate change impacts on housing are very unequal and particularly affect renters and people experiencing homelessness.
Homelessness could be four times higher by 2036 under a high-emissions future, as homes become more expensive and rents rise relative to incomes.
Global heating could worsen housing affordability, push up rents, and quadruple homelessness in a decade without fairer housing policies and action to reduce emissions.